Russia hits back at Britain over hacking, assassination claims and says relations are at ‘low levels’

Russia has denied accusations by Britain of major hacking attacks and assassinations. Picture: APSource:AP

RUSSIA’S ambassador has accused Britain of waging an “aggressive anti-Russian campaign” which has left relations between the two countries at a “very low level”.

During a lengthy press conference at the embassy in London, Alexander Yakovenko dismissed recent high-profile claims of cyberattacks by the Russian GRU military intelligence agency and involvement in the Salisbury nerve agent incident.

And he complained the UK authorities were continuing to refuse to co-operate with Moscow over the probe into the attempted poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal in Salisbury and the murder in London of Russian businessman Nikolai Glushkov.

He claimed the UK actions were intended to divert attention from the Salisbury incident and from Brexit.

Equipment found in a vehicle in The Hague as The Netherlands expelled four alleged Russian agents in April after uncovering a spy-novel-style bid by Russia's GRU military intelligence agency to target the Organisation for Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. Picture: AFPSource:AFP

The result of what he said had been a “well-orchestrated campaign” to discredit his country was to reduce UK-Russia relations to a “very low level”.

“The reason for that lies in an aggressive anti-Russian campaign launched by the current Tory Government and supported by British media,” he said.

“The Conservative Government has been acting in a completely unconstructive way by breaching multiple bilateral and international agreements and refusing to co- operate with Russia officials on the Salisbury incident or the death of the Russia national Nikolai Gushkov.

“The bilateral high-level political dialogue is currently frozen. That was not our initiative. That was the initiative of the British Government.”

Men identified as Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov were named as suspects in the nerve agent attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, England. Picture: APSource:AP

Mr Yakovenko dismissed claims by the Bellingcat investigative website to have unmasked the true identities of the two suspects in Salisbury case — originally identified by the UK authorities by the aliases Ruslan Boshirov and Alexander Petrov.

The website said their real names were Anatoliy Chepiga and Alexander Mishkin and that they were both highly-decorated officers in the GRU.

The suspects have an interview to the RT channel in Moscow, Russia claiming they were just tourists. Picture: APSource:AP

Bellingcat journalist Christo Grozev revealed the true identities of the two men accused of being involved in the assassination attempt. Picture: GettySource:Getty Images

However, Mr Yakovenko insisted that there was no reason to doubt their assertion in a Russian TV interview that they were actually Boshirov and Petrov and that they had been innocent tourists on a visit to Salisbury when the attack on Mr Skripal took place.

“We have the official statement of these people and we do not have any reason not to trust them,” he said.

He repeated Russian claims that Bellingcat was simply a tool of the “British special services”.

“Bellingcat is not the media. This is the tool of the deep establishment to leak certain things,” he said.